I ran a quick test yesterday which unfortunately did not work
- Power Macintosh 6100
- System 7.6.1
- 256 MB RAM (this is why I want the bypass)
- G3 accelerator
- HPV Card
I did not have so much time to mess around with the components or configuration, will see if it works with a more sensible setup!
The Power Macintosh 6100 emulation at infinitymac.org (uses DingusPPC) doesn't seem to have a memory test option in the Memory control panel of Mac OS 8.0 but does have the option in Mac OS 8.6. I would add some NVRAM logging to DingusPPC to see if it's accessing XPRAM or something.
The Power Macintosh 6100 emulation at infinitymac.org (uses DingusPPC) doesn't seem to have a memory test option in the Memory control panel of Mac OS 8.0 but does have the option in Mac OS 8.6. I would add some NVRAM logging to DingusPPC to see if it's accessing XPRAM or something.
I tried on my Power Mac 6100 and unfortunately it does not seem to work. I get the "Startup Memory Tests" option in System 8.6 to disable the test in the Memory control panel, but turning the test Off does not have any effect - it still takes forever to do a cold boot. This is true both with and without the G3 accelerator. I also tried with less RAM in case 2x128 was causing weird issues, but no dice.
I didn't realize I volunteered.I was thinking there could be some additional code paths for different hardware but I didn't notice any while debugging - although I was heavily focused on the particular one that performed the NVRAM writes that @joevt found so I could have missed it. But if you're saying that toggling the hidden option does not work on your 6100, then that suggests the code path might not be there and Apple didn't properly restrict that hidden option from hardware that doesn't support it. But let's wait to see what @joevt finds.
If Apple's own System 8.6 "disable" setting doesn't work on the PDM macs it seems much less likely that there is a software-only solution to bypass the check. Oh well! Still a huge fan of them for some reason I can't really rationalize![]()
Thanks for sharing this! I know I've come across that issue in the past and got really frustrated that cmd-opt didn't work. Now I know why!Anyhow, I've just discovered an additional wrinkle. CMD+OPT does't work when the Memory panel is selected in the traditional way from the drop-down from the Apple logo in menu bar! You have to launch the Memory Control Panel from the Control Panel Folder with CMD+OPT.